Photograph by Mike Miriello (’09M)
Engaged with Ideas

Professor’s second book gets down to earth

After raising awareness in his first book about light pollution and how it’s clouding our view of the nighttime sky, English professor Paul Bogard has shifted his attention 180 degrees to the ground beneath our feet.

Bogard’s second book, The Ground Beneath Us: From the Oldest Cities to the Last Wilderness, What Dirt Tells Us About Who We Are (Little, Brown and Co.), hit bookstores on March 21.
  
Like his first book, Bogard’s goal with The Ground Beneath Us is to get readers to think about a natural resource that is largely taken for granted.

“We spend 90 to 95 percent of our time inside,” Bogard says. “And when we walk outside, most of us walk on pavement. So we’ve become literally separated from natural ground. … And I think that as we’ve become separated from the natural ground, we’ve become separated from the fact that the natural ground, the natural world, gives us what we need to live.”

‘We spend 90 to 95 percent of our time inside. And when we walk outside, most of us walk on pavement.’
Paul Bogard

Bogard says the book is written for a general audience. Readers should enjoy his earthly accounts of his visits to Treblinka, the Nazi death camp in Poland; farm fields in Iowa; rural parts of Colombia; and major cities such as New York and London.

“At the end of the book, I come home to the place where I live and I walk out the door and look down at the ground right where I live, because ultimately the most important ground to any of us is the ground directly under our feet.”

Bogard says he is lucky in that he gets to teach environmental writing at JMU. He tells his students they are “learning the same skills from me that you’ll use the rest of your life as a writer. It’s not like it’s something way different when you get published.”

Find out more about Bogard’s teaching philosophy in this Taking on Tomorrow feature.

The Ground Beneath Us can be purchased at www.paul-bogard.com/books-and-writings/.

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